Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 511 
at the front end, and three pairs of white bars, on the edges, 
behind. On the back part of this dark dorsum are chevrons 
made of delicate white lines. In this specimen the side scales 
are pure white. Low down on each side is a row of black dots, 
and still lower down is a dark line. In the male, the palpi and 
first legs are reddish with darker spots, the other legs, as well 
as the four pairs and the palpi in the female, being white, con¬ 
spicuously dotted with black. 
The male of tibialis was first figured in Die Arachniden, fig. 
1333, then in the Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy, 1888, 
PI. I, fig. 58, PI. Y, fig. 58, and for the third time in the Occa¬ 
sional Papers of the National History Society of Wisconsin, 
1894, PI. XI, fig. 6. 
This species comes from Massachusetts, New York, Pennsyl¬ 
vania, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Texas and Wisconsin. 
PHLEGRA E. S. 1876. 
Type, FASCIATA HAHN. 
1844. Attus (leopardus), H., Jour. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. IV. 
1875. Attus (leopardus), H., Occ. Pap. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., II, p. 63. 
1876. Phlegra E. S., Ar. Fr., Ill, p. 120. 
1891. Phlegra E., Trans. Conn. Acad. VIII, New England Attidse, p. 24. 
1901. Phlegra E. S., Hist. Nat. Araign., 2me Ed., II, p. 670. 
1905. Phlegra B., Am. Nat. XXXIX, p. 321. 
The cephalothorax is long and a little widest behind the mid¬ 
dle, rather low and flat, the cephalic plate is slightly inclined 
forward and the thoracic slope begins not far from the posterior 
end. The quadrangle of the eyes is short, equally wide in front 
and behind, and occupies only 1-3 of the cephalothorax. The 
first row of eyes plainly curved, the middle less than twice the 
lateral. The second row* is half way and the dorsal row is not 
quite as wide as the cephalothorax at that place. The sternum is 
oval and the anterior coxae are separated by the width of the lip, 
which is as wide as long. The metatarsi are shorter than the 
tarsi and the fourth leg is longer than the third. 
